Skip to Main Content
UTexas.edu

Resources for:

  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Employers
Sign In
The University of Texas at Austin School of Law
  • Choosing Texas Law

    • Why Texas Law
    • Our Community
    • Career Outcomes
    • Living in Austin
    • Visit Us

    Juris Doctor (J.D.)

    • About Our J.D. Program
    • J.D. Admissions
    • Recruiting Events
    • Cost and Financial Aid
    • Admitted J.D. Students Requires UT EID

    Master of Laws (LL.M.)

    • LL.M. Admissions
    • Cost of Attendance

    How to Apply

    • J.D. Application Requirements
    • LL.M. Application Requirements
    Check Your Status
  • About our Faculty

    • Our Faculty Community
    • Faculty Directory
    • Research and Publications
    • Academic Fellowship

    Faculty News

    • Faculty in the Media
  • Academic Planning

    • Course Schedule
    • Academic Calendar
    • Registration Planning
    • Advising
    • Academic Success
    • Policies and Procedures

    Experiential Learning

    • Clinics
    • Internships
    • Pro Bono
    • Advocacy
    • Legal Writing

    Financial Aid

    • Financial Aid Overview
    • Scholarships

    Career Planning

    • Career Services
    • Preparing for Legal Interviews
    • Interview & Networking Programs
    • Private Sector Careers
    • Public Service Careers
    • Judicial Clerkships
    • Career Outcomes

    Community Life

    • Student Life
    • Mentoring Program
    • Wellness
    • Society Program
    • Student Organizations
    • Journals
    • Events Calendar
    More Resources Students Home
    Dashboard Canvas
  • Alumni Engagement

    • Alumni Overview
    • Alumni Events
    • Get Involved
    • Class News and Notes
    • Alumni Resources
    • Contact the Alumni Office

    Development Opportunities

    • Giving Options
    • Annual Fund for Texas Law
    • Donor Stories
  • About Us

    • Leadership
    • Offices and Directory
    • Tarlton Law Library
    • History of Texas Law
    • Contact Us

    Community

    • Our Community
    • News
    • Events Calendar
    • Living in Austin

    Programs and Centers

    • Programs and Centers
    • Pipeline Program
    • UT CLE

    Getting Here

    • Directions and Parking
    • Building Maps

Course Schedule

  • Full Grid
  • 1L Grid
  • Evaluations
  • Your Favorites
Day/Time

Day

Time

Exam/Paper
Credit Hours
Exclude
Course Type
Features
Pass/Fail
Course Level
Semester

Applied Filters

  • All semesters Remove filter
  • Reset filters
  • 1
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100

Sort

2401—2425 of 2499 classes match the current filters

Classes Found

Torts

Unique 28085
4 hours
  • W. Wagner
  • TUE, WED, THU 2:30 – 3:37 pm TNH 3.142
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/2)
Spring 2024

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28090
4 hours
  • M. Wasserman
  • TUE, WED, THU 9:05 – 10:12 am TNH 2.123
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/2)
Spring 2024

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29125
4 hours
  • T. McGarity
  • MON, TUE, WED, THU 1:05 – 1:55 pm TNH 2.140
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/7)
Fall 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29130
5 hours
  • S. Williams
  • TUE, WED, THU 9:05 – 10:12 am TNH 3.125
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/14)
Fall 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29135
5 hours
  • T. McCormack
  • TUE, WED, THU 9:05 – 10:12 am TNH 2.123
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/14)
Fall 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29140
5 hours
  • E. Sepper
  • TUE, WED, THU 9:05 – 10:12 am TNH 2.139
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/14)
Fall 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28785
4 hours
  • E. Sepper
  • MON, TUE, WED 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 2.139
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/4)
Spring 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28790
4 hours
  • S. Williams
  • TUE, WED, THU 2:15 – 3:22 pm TNH 2.139
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/4)
Spring 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28945
4 hours
  • T. McGarity
  • MON, TUE, WED, THU 2:15 – 3:05 pm TNH 2.139
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/8)
Fall 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
480V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28950
5 hours
  • W. Farnsworth
  • MON, TUE, WED 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 2.124
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/15)
Fall 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28955
5 hours
  • W. Wagner
  • WED 2:25 – 4:05 pm JON 5.206
  • THU 10:20 am – 12:00 pm JON 5.206
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Take-home exam up to 8 hrs (12/15)
Other
Fall 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28960
5 hours
  • M. Wasserman
  • TUE, WED, THU 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 3.127
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/15)
Fall 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
580V

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28530
4 hours
  • E. Sepper
  • MON, WED 11:30 am – 12:37 pm TNH 2.139
  • FRI 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 2.139
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/6)
Spring 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
427

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 28535
4 hours
  • T. McGarity
  • MON, TUE, WED, THU 1:15 – 2:05 pm TNH 2.137
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (5/6)
Spring 2022

Course Information

Course ID:
427

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29070
4 hours
  • W. Wagner
  • WED, THU 2:20 – 4:10 pm TNH 2.140
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Take-home exam up to 8 hrs (12/13)
Fall 2021

Course Information

Course ID:
427

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts

Unique 29075
4 hours
  • M. Wasserman
  • TUE, WED, THU 2:20 – 3:27 pm TNH 2.138
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/13)
Fall 2021

Course Information

Course ID:
427

Registration Information

  • 1L-only required

Description

Limits of liability and methods of establishing liability for intentional and unintentional injuries to persons or property.

Torts Policy

Unique 31805
3 hours
  • A. Dorfman
  • MON, WED 1:05 – 2:20 pm
P/F Allowed (JD only)
Eval:
Final exam (12/11)
Fall 2026

Course Information

Course ID:
396W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Tort law, like most law, is constantly evolving in response to changing circumstances and shifting social values and convictions. Often, this evolution involves small adjustments to existing legal principles. At other times, however, the warranted response is more transformative. For instance, the growing threat of global warming and, in particular, the significant role humans play in contributing to it may call for a transformative shift in how we understand and apply the tort of public nuisance. Another is the increasing awareness of the danger posed by private, rather than merely state, suppression of speech. Online platforms, employers, and even landlords often engage in censorship, leaving platform users, employees, and tenants unable to engage in expressive acts. Although tort liability for private censorship remains limited, recent developments suggest that changes in the law may be on the horizon. This course will offer in-depth examinations of these and other important transformations in and around the law of torts. At a more general level, engaging in these micro-based analyses of the law of torts can illuminate the broader, macro-based questions such as how tort law can respond to emerging challenges and what tort law is for. By examining these shifts, the course will address not only the future of tort law but also foundational questions about its role of addressing the demands of freedom, equality, justice, and legitimacy in a rapidly evolving world.

No casebook will be used.

Torts Policy

Unique 30904
3 hours
  • A. Dorfman
  • TUE, WED 1:05 – 2:20 pm TNH 3.115
P/F Allowed (JD only)
Eval:
Final exam (12/10)
Fall 2025

Course Information

Course ID:
396W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Tort law, like most law, is constantly evolving in response to changing circumstances and shifting social values and convictions. Often, this evolution involves small adjustments to existing legal principles. At other times, however, the warranted response is more transformative. For instance, the growing threat of global warming and, in particular, the significant role humans play in contributing to it may call for a transformative shift in how we understand and apply the tort of public nuisance. Another is the increasing awareness of the danger posed by private, rather than merely state, suppression of speech. Online platforms, employers, and even landlords often engage in censorship, leaving platform users, employees, and tenants unable to engage in expressive acts. Although tort liability for private censorship remains limited, recent developments suggest that changes in the law may be on the horizon. This course will offer in-depth examinations of these and other important transformations in and around the law of torts. At a more general level, engaging in these micro-based analyses of the law of torts can illuminate the broader, macro-based questions such as how tort law can respond to emerging challenges and what tort law is for. By examining these shifts, the course will address not only the future of tort law but also foundational questions about its role of addressing the demands of freedom, equality, justice, and legitimacy in a rapidly evolving world.

No casebook will be used.

Trade Secret Law

Unique 31745
2 hours
  • L. Buratti
  • M. Calaf
  • THU 2:30 – 4:20 pm
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/14)
Other
Fall 2026

Course Information

Course ID:
296W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

This course will provide in-depth study of U.S. and Texas law protecting trade secrets, the legal mechanism that businesses are increasingly relying on to protect their intellectual property and confidential business information. The course will cover statutory and common law protection for trade secrets. It will examine trade secret fundamentals such as the scope, duration, and prerequisites for trade secret protection, including subject matter, secrecy, economic value, and reasonable efforts to protect the trade secret. Common misappropriation scenarios will be addressed: joint ventures, potential acquisitions, and departing employees going to work for competitors. In addition, the course will explore litigation strategies for trade secrets cases, in particular requests for a preliminary injunction, forensic discovery, and timing of identification of the trade secret. Employment law angles of misappropriation of trade secrets will also be discussed, such as issues regarding confidentiality and non-competition agreements. Procedures and requirements for preserving trade secret protection will also be covered. Finally, the course touches on relevant comparisons between trade secret law and other legal doctrines, such as patent law. TEXTBOOK: Trade Secret Law in a nutshell. Sharon K. Sandeen, Elizabeth A. Rowe. ISBN: 9781640202115

Trade Secret Law

Unique 30855
2 hours
  • L. Buratti
  • M. Calaf
  • THU 2:30 – 4:20 pm JON 6.206
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (12/13)
Fall 2025

Course Information

Course ID:
296W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

This course will provide in-depth study of U.S. and Texas law protecting trade secrets, the legal mechanism that businesses are increasingly relying on to protect their intellectual property and confidential business information. The course will cover statutory and common law protection for trade secrets. It will examine trade secret fundamentals such as the scope, duration, and prerequisites for trade secret protection, including subject matter, secrecy, economic value, and reasonable efforts to protect the trade secret. Common misappropriation scenarios will be addressed: joint ventures, potential acquisitions, and departing employees going to work for competitors. In addition, the course will explore litigation strategies for trade secrets cases, in particular requests for a preliminary injunction, forensic discovery, and timing of identification of the trade secret. Employment law angles of misappropriation of trade secrets will also be discussed, such as issues regarding confidentiality and non-competition agreements. Procedures and requirements for preserving trade secret protection will also be covered. Finally, the course touches on relevant comparisons between trade secret law and other legal doctrines, such as patent law. TEXTBOOK: Trade Secret Law in a nutshell. Sharon K. Sandeen, Elizabeth A. Rowe. ISBN: 9781640202115

Trade Secret Law

Unique 28710
2 hours
  • L. Buratti
  • M. Calaf
  • THU 2:30 – 4:20 pm JON 6.206
P/F Allowed (JD only)
Eval:
Final exam (12/17)
Other
Fall 2024

Course Information

Course ID:
296W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Taught by Leah Buratti and Maria Calaf.

This course will provide in-depth study of U.S. and Texas law protecting trade secrets, the legal mechanism that businesses are increasingly relying on to protect their intellectual property and confidential business information. The course will cover statutory and common law protection for trade secrets. It will examine trade secret fundamentals such as the scope, duration, and prerequisites for trade secret protection, including subject matter, secrecy, economic value, and reasonable efforts to protect the trade secret. Common misappropriation scenarios will be addressed: joint ventures, potential acquisitions, and departing employees going to work for competitors. In addition, the course will explore litigation strategies for trade secrets cases, in particular requests for a preliminary injunction, forensic discovery, and timing of identification of the trade secret. Employment law angles of misappropriation of trade secrets will also be discussed, such as issues regarding confidentiality and non-competition agreements. Procedures and requirements for preserving trade secret protection will also be covered. Finally, the course touches on relevant comparisons between trade secret law and other legal doctrines, such as patent law.

TEXTBOOK: Trade Secret Law in a nutshell. Sharon K. Sandeen, Elizabeth A. Rowe. ISBN: 9781640202115

Trade Secret Law

Unique 29563
2 hours
  • L. Buratti
  • M. Calaf
  • THU 2:30 – 4:20 pm JON 6.206
P/F Allowed (JD only)
Eval:
Final exam (12/9)
Fall 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
296W

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Taught by Leah Buratti and Maria Calaf.

This course will provide in-depth study of U.S. and Texas law protecting trade secrets, the legal mechanism that businesses are increasingly relying on to protect their intellectual property and confidential business information. The course will cover statutory and common law protection for trade secrets. It will examine trade secret fundamentals such as the scope, duration, and prerequisites for trade secret protection, including subject matter, secrecy, economic value, and reasonable efforts to protect the trade secret. Common misappropriation scenarios will be addressed: joint ventures, potential acquisitions, and departing employees going to work for competitors. In addition, the course will explore litigation strategies for trade secrets cases, in particular requests for a preliminary injunction, forensic discovery, and timing of identification of the trade secret. Employment law angles of misappropriation of trade secrets will also be discussed, such as issues regarding confidentiality and non-competition agreements. Procedures and requirements for preserving trade secret protection will also be covered. Finally, the course touches on relevant comparisons between trade secret law and other legal doctrines, such as patent law.

TEXTBOOK: Trade Secret Law in a nutshell. Sharon K. Sandeen, Elizabeth A. Rowe. ISBN: 9781640202115

Trademarks

Unique 29579
2 hours
  • R. Bone
  • TUE, THU 3:55 – 5:45 pm TNH 2.123
P/F Allowed (JD only)
Eval:
Early exam (3/10)
Spring 2026

Course Information

Course ID:
286T
Short course:
1/20/26 — 3/5/26

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

PREREQUISITE: Must have taken at least one of the following courses: Intro to Intellectual Property, Copyright, Patent Law.

This course will explore the doctrine, policy, and theory of trademark and unfair competition law. Our principal focus is the federal Lanham Act, although we will also touch on state law from time to time. Trademarks can include such things as words, slogans, logos, product shapes and product packaging, smells, sounds, and so on, provided they are capable of becoming unique identifiers of source. Specific topics to cover (depending on time) include how a party obtains trademark rights; the scope and limitations of trademark rights; trademark infringement and dilution; the nature of trademark defenses, and the right of competitors and the public to engage in unauthorized uses of marks for purposes such as description, parody and comparative advertising. Along the way, we will discuss some of the modern controversies over the expansion of trademark rights, including the rise of the "brand" and "branding" over the past 25 years or so.

Trademarks

Unique 28355
3 hours
  • E. Nicolas
  • TUE, THU 3:55 – 5:10 pm TNH 2.140
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Floating take-home exam
Midterm exam
Other
Spring 2024

Course Information

Course ID:
386T

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Trademark law is a species of intellectual property and unfair competition law. Trademarks represent the goodwill (or reputation) of a business and its products/services. Businesses rely on trademarks to identify their products/services, to indicate the source of those products/services, and to distinguish those products/services from the competition. Consumers rely on trademarks to distinguish products/services among competitors and as assurances of quality. Needless to say, trademarks are among a business’s most valuable assets.

This course delves into the fundamentals and modern-day application of U.S. trademark law. We will study the underlying principles of trademark law, the different types of trademarks, how trademark rights are acquired and lost, the scope and limits of those rights, the standards for determining whether a trademark violates the rights of another or deceives the public, the defenses and remedies available to parties in an action for trademark infringement or dilution, and an overview of the federal trademark registration process. Time permitting, we will also study closely related topics like trade dress, cybersquatting, counterfeit and gray market goods, false advertising, and the right of publicity.

Trademarks

Unique 29120
3 hours
  • E. Nicolas
  • TUE, THU 3:45 – 5:00 pm TNH 2.140
P/F Not Allowed
Eval:
Final exam (4/27)
Spring 2023

Course Information

Course ID:
386T

Registration Information

  • Upperclass-only elective
  • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

Description

Same as LAW 350N, Trademarks.

Trademark law is a species of intellectual property and unfair competition law. Trademarks represent the goodwill (or reputation) of a business and its products/services. Businesses rely on trademarks to identify their goods/services, to indicate the source of those products/services, and to distinguish those products/services from the competition. Consumers rely on trademarks to distinguish products/services among competitors and as assurances of quality. Needless to say, trademarks are among a business’s most valuable assets.

This course delves into the fundamentals and modern-day application of U.S. trademark law. We will study the underlying principles of trademark law, the different types of trademarks, how trademark rights are acquired and lost, the scope and limits of those rights, the standards for determining whether a trademark violates the rights of another or deceives the public, the defenses and remedies available to parties in an action for trademark infringement or dilution, and an overview of the federal trademark registration process. Time permitting, we will also study closely related topics like trade dress, cybersquatting, counterfeit and gray market goods, false advertising, and the right of publicity.

  • 1
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100
Texas Law

Visit Us

727 E. Dean Keeton Street
Austin, Texas 78705

(512) 471-5151

  • Offices and Directory
  • Directions and Parking
  • Building Maps
  • Contact Us

Resources for

  • Current Students
  • Faculty
  • Staff

Information

  • News
  • Events
Give to Texas Law

Connect with Texas Law

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Flickr
© 2026 The University of Texas at Austin
  • ABA Required Disclosures
  • Emergency Information
  • Web Privacy Policy
  • Web Accessibility Policy
  • Site Policies